Sneak preview: Polaroid PoGo printer for instant digital photo printouts

By Jacqueline Emigh | Published June 11, 2008, 3:38 PM

Today at the Bluetooth SIG press event in New York City, Polaroid previewed a pint-sized, inkless portable printer dubbed the PoGo, that can turn your digital camera into a modern equivalent of the old Polaroid Instant.

NEW YORK CITY (BetaNews) - Remember those old Polaroid instant cameras from the latter half of the 20th century? (Would you believe they still make them?) Today at a Bluetooth SIG press event, Polaroid showed off its PoGo portable printer, which uses a Bluetooth link from a cell phone's camera to make your handset into a modern SX-70 equivalent.

In a demo for BetaNews at the event, Andy Mitchelides, senior marketing associate, showed how a photo file can be sent to the printer wirelessly from a cell phone for printout on business card-sized pieces of paper less than a minute later -- all without the hassle of either film or printer cartridges.

Mitchelides told BetaNews that, to avoid the need for ink cartridges, the PoGo uses ZINK (Zero Ink) technology from a company called ZINK Imaging.

Polaroid, long the king of film-based instant cameras, used a focus group to help choose the name PoGo for its first entry into the new realm of digital instant photography.

The Bluetooth 2.0-enabled PoGo will become available July 6 for $199, exclusively in Best Buy stores. The accompanying paper, also to be sold at Best Buy, will be priced at around $3.99 for ten 2- by- 3-inch-sheets.

"That's only about 30 or 40 cents per sheet -- a lot less than for larger printouts. And you can literally carry this printer in your pocket," BetaNews was told.

The paper will be equipped with a sticky backing. So if you want to display the resulting photo on your laptop or lapel, for instance, you can.

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